Tight control of cellular redox homeostasis is essential for protection against oxidative damage and for maintenance of normal metabolism as well as redox signaling events. Under oxidative stress conditions, the tripeptide glutathione can switch from its reduced form (GSH) to oxidized glutathione disulfide (GSSG), and thus, forms an important cellular redox buffer. GSSG is normally reduced to GSH by 2 glutathione reductase (GR) isoforms encoded in the Arabidopsis genome, cytosolic GR1 and GR2 dual-targeted to chloroplasts and mitochondria. Measurements of total GR activity in leaf extracts of wild-type and 2 gr1 deletion mutants revealed that Ϸ65% of the total GR activity is attributed to GR1, whereas Ϸ35% is contributed by GR2. Despite the lack of a large share in total GR activity, gr1 mutants do not show any informative phenotype, even under stress conditions, and thus, the physiological impact of GR1 remains obscure. To elucidate its role in plants, glutathione-specific redox-sensitive GFP was used to dynamically measure the glutathione redox potential (E GSH) in the cytosol. Using this tool, it is shown that E GSH in gr1 mutants is significantly shifted toward more oxidizing conditions. Surprisingly, dynamic reduction of GSSG formed during induced oxidative stress in gr1 mutants is still possible, although significantly delayed compared with wild-type plants. We infer that there is functional redundancy in this critical pathway. Integrated biochemical and genetic assays identify the NADPH-dependent thioredoxin system as a backup system for GR1. Deletion of both, NADPH-dependent thioredoxin reductase A and GR1, prevents survival due to a pollen lethal phenotype.redox homeostasis ͉ redox imaging ͉ redox-sensitive GFP ͉ thioredoxin reductase
During the 70s and 80s two plant thioredoxin systems were identified. The chloroplastic system is composed of a ferredoxin-dependent thioredoxin, with two thioredoxin types (m and f) regulating the activity of enzymes implicated in photosynthetic carbon assimilation. In the cytosol of heterotrophic tissues, an NADP dependent thioredoxin reductase and a thioredoxin (h) were identified. The first plant glutaredoxin was only identified later, in 1994. Our view of plant thioredoxins and glutaredoxins was profoundly modified by the sequencing programs which revealed an unexpected number of genes encoding not only the previously identified disulfide reductases, but also numerous new types. At the same time it became clear that plant genomes encode chloroplastic, cytosolic and mitochondrial peroxiredoxins, suggesting a major role for redoxins in anti-oxidant defense. Efficient proteomics approaches were developed allowing the characterization of numerous thioredoxin target proteins. They are implicated in different aspects of plant life including development and adaptation to environmental changes and stresses. The most important challenge for the next years will probably be to identify in planta which redoxin reduces which target, a question which remains unsolved due to the low specificities of redoxins in vitro and the numerous redundancies which in most cases mask the phenotype of redoxin mutants.
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